VIRGINIA CHESS #3. Newsletter The bimonthly publication of the Virginia Chess Federation

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "VIRGINIA CHESS #3. Newsletter The bimonthly publication of the Virginia Chess Federation"

Transcription

1 VIRGINIA CHESS Newsletter The bimonthly publication of the Virginia Chess Federation #3 Martin Velíšek

2 VIRGINIA CHESS Newsletter Issue #3 Editor: Macon Shibut 8234 Citadel Place Vienna VA vcfeditor@cox.net Circulation: Ernie Schlich 1370 South Braden Crescent Norfolk VA membership@vachess.org k w r Virginia Chess is published six times per year by the Virginia Chess Federation. Membership benefits (dues: $10/yr adult; $5/yr junior under 18) include a subscription to Virginia Chess. Send material for publication to the editor. Send dues, address changes, etc to Circulation. The Virginia Chess Federation (VCF) is a non-profit organization for the use of its members. Dues for regular adult membership are $10/yr. Junior memberships are $5/ yr. President: Adam Chrisney, PO Box , Alexandria, VA chrisney2@gmail.com Membership Secretary: Ernie Schlich, 1370 South Braden Crescent, Norfolk VA 23502, membership@vachess. org Treasurer Mike Hoffpauir, 405 Hounds Chase, Yorktown VA 23693, mhoffpauir@aol.com Scholastics Coordinator: Mike Callaham, 8712 Cherokee Road, Richmond VA 23235, waterman2010kir@aol.com Virginia/Maryland/DC Tournament Clearinghouse: Mike Atkins, matkins2@comcast.net VCF Inc Directors: Mike Hoffpauir, Ernie Schlich, Michael Callaham, Andrew Rea, Adam Chrisney.

3 #3 1 From the Editor I'm afraid this is a rather somber issue of Virginia Chess. Purely by chance, most of the material that I have available for publication this time concerns the passing away of local chess players. It makes me think about how precious are the friendships we have through chess. Too soon comes the checkmate. It would not hurt to remember that when we consider whoever sits across the board from us at our next tournaments. ed Cherry Blossom Classic The 4 th annual Cherry Blossom Classic was held May at the Dulles Marriott outside Washington DC. 203 players competed across several sections. In the Open group, IMs Priyadharshan Kannappan & Akshat Chandra each scored 5½-1½ to share first place. Half a point behind came Praveen Balakrishnan, Lokesh Palani & IM Tegshsure Enkhbat. Ralph Zimmer was next with 4½, followed half a point further back by former state champion Andrew Samuelson along with Christopher Yang, Justin Paul, Sahil Sinha, Maximillian Lu, Justin Lohr & Jack Barrow. Open section co-winner Chandra & runner-up Balakrishnan also tied for 1 st in the blitz tournament. In the Under 2200 section, Trung Nguyen & Tan Nguyen tied for 1 st also with 5½ points. Franco Jose, Timothy Rogalski & Richard Tan were each 5-2 to take the remaining place prizes. Stephen Jablon also scored 5 and claimed top U2000. Jason Rosenhouse & David Siamon were 2 nd U2000. The Under 1900 saw a clear winner, Andrew Miller at 6-1. Carla Naylor was clear 2 nd with 5½. Diego Gutierrez, Siddhant Nair & Eduardo Rodriguez finished with 5 apiece, followed a half point further back by Joshua Taylor, Peter Snow, Andrew Miles, Sathya Gnanakumar, Nicholas Xie & Yoseph Mak. Carl Ramos Torres, Mark Eliot Davis & Suraj Oruganti finished jointly atop the Under 1600 section with 5½ points apiece. Johnathan Tong, Parth Jaiswal & Shawn Rob Kingman split top U1400. The Under 1300 was a 2-day event of six rounds. Arnav Gupta won in five of them and drew the other to win clear first t. Kevin Zimmer was second with 5-1. Zoe Bredesen & Carissa Zheng followed at 4½. Michael Joshua also scored 4½ to claim the U1100 prize.

4 2 Virginia Chess Newsletter Denis Strenzwilk DENIS STRENZWILK was a fixture at all the big local tournaments from the time I first began playing organized chess in the early 1970s. He was a strong player, a Maryland state champion with a master rating in an era before such ratings were as common as today. The thing that I will remember most about Denis is his determination at the board. No one exceeded him in capacity to grind away in difficult endgames. Back before delay clocks and sudden death time controls were commonplace, it could happen that a long-running game could defer the start of the next round for everyone else. While no official statistics exist, I would offer that Denis may have held the record for causing such episodes. The last round pairings of seemingly every Maryland Open in the 1980s went up late because the directors had to wait until Denis Strenzwilk finished struggling in a 100+ move rook-and-knight ending from the penultimate round. In our personal rivalry Denis won the first game he and I ever played. For a long time after that I could not beat him despite regularly getting good positions, so our score remained for years at +1 in his favor. Only much later, literally decades after our first encounters, did age begin to work in my favor so that I managed to win a couple.

5 #3 3 Macon Shibut Denis Strenzwilk Eastern Open, sometime in the early-to-mid 1980s Philidor? 1 Nf3 d6 2 d4 Bg4 3 e4 Nd7 4 Nc3 e5 5 Be3 Ngf6 6 Be2 Be7 7 O-O O-O 8 a4 a5 9 Qd2 c6 10 Kh1 Qc7 11 h3 Bh5 12 Nh4 Bxe2 13 Qxe2 g6 14 f4 Nh5 15 Qf2? [I could still claim some initiative in a mutually hazardous position after 15 Nf5!] 15...Qd8! [Now Black is going to win material. However, my play turns out to be of the accidental brilliancy variety.] 16 g3 exf4 17 Bxf4 g5 18 Nf5 gxf4 19 gxf4 [So just one pawn for the piece, but the Nf5 is a monster. I m not sure what Black should/could have done differently but the ensuing phase proved much easier for White to play.] 19 Kh8 20 Rg1 Ndf6 21 Qf3 Qd7 22 Nxe7 Qxe7 23 e5 [Suddenly I m getting the piece back which made me over-optimistic. In fact the chances are still roughly even, and it s possible they ve been that was all along.] 23 d5 24 Rg5 [Encouraged by the success of my sacrifice I was no longer satisfied with 24 exf6 as something like, eg, 24 Nxf6 25 Rae1 Qb4 looked annoying.] 24...Rg8 25 Rag1 Rg6 26 h4 [trying so hard to not play 26 exf6] 26...Rag8 27 f5 R6g7 28 exf6 Nxf6 29 Kh2 h6 30 Rxg7 Rxg7 31 Rxg7 Kxg7 32 Kh3 Kh7 33 Qf4 Qe / \ /+o+ +o+l\ / +o+ J O\ /O +o+p+ \ /p+ P Q P\ /+ H + +k\ / Pp+ + +\ /+ + W + \ 34 Qe5? Trying to make something out of nothing has gradually led me towards danger, until now I collapse utterly. 34 Kg2 was still okay for White Qh1+ [Good enough but he could have scored a direct knockout by 34...Qf1+ 35 Kg3 (35 Kh2 Ng4+ ) 35...Nh5+ because after 36 Kg4 there is 36 Qg2+! 37 Kxh5 Qf3mate] 35 Qh2 [35 Kg3 offers a second bite at the apple 35 Qg1+ 36 Kf3 Qf1+ 37 Kg3 Nh5+] 35...Qf3+ 36 Qg3 Qxf5+ 37 Kg2 Qxc2+ 38 Kf3 Qd3+ 39 Kg2 Qxg3+ 40 Kxg3 Ne4+ 41 Kf4 Nxc3 42 bxc3 b5 0-1

6 4 Virginia Chess Newsletter Barry Quillon Barry Quillon, passed away December 22, Barry was active in Charlottesville area chess for many years. He moved to Seattle for a time but the Editor continued to receive occasional appreciative notes from him as he maintained his connection through Virginia Chess. Barry returned to Virginia in 2011 but played no tournament chess after the Charlottesville Open of that year. Preston Hippeard - Barry Quillon 1997 Virginia Closed Réti 1 Nf3 c5 2 g3 Nf6 3 Bg2 Nc6 4 d3 g6 5 Nbd2 Bg7 6 O-O O-O 7 e4 d6 8 Re1 Nh5 9 c3 e5 10 Nf1 b5 11 Be3 Rb8 12 Qd2 f5 13 Bh6 f4 14 Bxg7 Kxg7 15 d4 Bg4 16 Qd1 cxd4 17 cxd4 fxg3 18 fxg3 Qf6 19 N1d2 Nxd4 20 Rf1 Qe7 21 Nb3 Nxf3+ 22 Bxf3 Bxf3 23 Rxf3 Nf6 24 Qd a6 25 Qe3 Ng4 26 Qe2 Qa7+ 27 Kh1 Nf2+ 28 Kg2 Rxf3 29 Qxf3 Rf8 30 Qe2 Qb7 31 Nd2 (diagram) 31 d5 32 Rf1 dxe4 33 Qe3 Ng4 34 Qxe4 Qxe4+ 35 Nxe4 Ne / + + T +\ /+w+ + Lo\ /o+ O +o+\ /+o+ O + \ / + +p+ +\ /+ + + P \ /pp HqJkP\ /R \

7 #3 Steve Jablon - Barry Quillon 1999 Fredericksburg Open Sicilian 1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 e6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 a6 5 Bd3 Nc6 6 Be3 Nf6 7 Nc3 b5 8 O-O Ne5 9 f3 Bc5 10 Kh1 Qb Nce2 Bb7 12 Bg1 g5 /t+ +l+ T\ /+n+o+o+o\ /ow +oj +\ /+on J O \ / + Hp+ +\ /+ +b+p+ \ /ppp+h+pp\ /R +q+rbk\ 13 Nb3 Bxg1 14 Nxg1 Ke7 15 f4 gxf4 16 Rxf4 Rag8 17 Qe1 Rg4 18 Rxg4 Nexg4 19 Nh3 Qd6 20 g3 h5 21 Rd1 Nxe4 22 Bxe4 Bxe4+ 23 Kg1 Qb6+ 24 Rd4 Bxc2 25 Qb4+ d6 26 Nf4 Rc8 27 Kg2 Rc4 28 Qa5 Qc6+ 29 Nd5+ exd5 30 Qe1+ Be4+ 31 Kh3 Rxd4 32 Nxd4 Qd7 33 Kh4 Nxh2 34 Nc6+ Qxc6 35 Qe3 Nf3+ 36 Kxh5 Qd7 37 g4 Qe6 38 Qa7+ Kf8 39 Qb8+ Kg7 0-1 Upcoming Tournaments 26 th Charlottesville Open July 16-17, Comfort Inn Monticello near Charlottesville, Va. Open & Under 1700 sections with 1 st -3 rd place $$ guaranteed in the Open Section. All rounds are Game/90 with 5-sec time delay Virginia Commonwealth Games Chess Tournament July 23, Liberty University, Lynchburg, Va. Two Scholastic Sections (K-6 and K-12) and one Open Section. Play for 2 x Gold, 2 x Sliver and 2 x Bronze medals in each section. 80 th Virginia Closed State Championship September 3-5, Hilton Garden Inn, Glen Allen, Va. Open and Under 1800 Sections, three-day and two-day schedules. Get more information on all of these tournaments at 5

8 6 Virginia Chess Newsletter Abhimanyu Banerjee - Robert Fischer 2016 George Washington Open Giuoco Piano Notes by Robert Fischer Ambitious chess players are often told to study their losses if they want to improve. I certainly did learn a lot from this one. I got a much better game and then almost imperceptibly turned it into a worse game. 1 e4 e5 [I think at the expert master level this might just be the most reliable response to 1 e4 for practical and theoretical reasons. Practically, while the Sicilian, French and Caro Kann are more common, that fact means people study them a lot, and often players who use 1 e4 as White are less well prepared to meet 1...e5 simply because it is less common. Also, Black opens lines for development and makes an immediate claim of central equality; neither the Sicilian, French nor Caro Kann accomplish both of these objective with the first move.] 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bc4 Bc5 4 c3 Nf6 5 d3 [After Korchnoi surprised him in the open Ruy Lopez, Karpov opted for this move four times in their 1981 match to give his seconds time to work out an effective response to Korchnoi s novelty.] 5...d6 6

9 #3 Bb3 [The 8 th game of that match was drawn after 80 moves after Karpov got a slight pull in the opening: 6 Nbd2 a6 7 O-O O-O 8 Bb3 Ba7 9 h3 Be6 10 Bc2 d5 11 Re1 dxe4 12 dxe4 Nh5 13 Nf1 Qxd1 14 Rxd1 ] 6...h6 7 Nbd2 Bd7 [7...Be6 is better. Black should not fear the doubled pawn as he gets control of important squares and the half open f-file.] 8 Nf1 Qe7 9 Qe2 O-O-O 10 Bc2 d5 11 Bd2 d4 12 c4 [While Black has played very purposefully, White has dallied with his N-d2-f1 maneuver with the result that Black has a lead in development and White s king is still in the center. It is not too significant if the position remains closed, but Black might gain the advantage if he can open the position.] 12...g5 [12... Nh5 is a better try. If White responds 13 a3 preparing play on the queenside (not 13 Nxe5? Nxe5 14 Qxh5 Bg4 wins the queen) 13...Nf4 14 Bxf4 exf4 15 b4 Bd6 16 c5 Be5 Black has f5 coming, opening the position.] 13 a3 g4 14 Ng1 a5? [This is anti-positional. White wants to open lines on the queenside; to do so his pawns must make contact with the black pawns, and then by making an exchange White can open a file. When Black advances his pawns, White has a shorter road to travel to make contact. This is why, when making the luft for the bishop, it would have been better to advance the a-pawn only one square. White s b-pawn would need an additional tempo to achieve the desired exchange: 14...a6 15 b4 Ba7 16 b5 Nb8 17 bxa6 Nxa6 White s attack cannot be successful with his two knights stuck on the first rank and his king s rook out of play. Black should once again focus on opening the center and getting after the White king, even if he has to sacrifice material to do so. A sample variation could go. 18 Qd1 (preparing to develop the king s knight) 18...Nxe4 19 dxe4 d3 20 Bb3 Nc5 and Fritz thinks Black has a winning attack.] 15 Ba4 Kb / L T + T\ /+oonwo+ \ / +j+ J O\ /O N O + \ /b+pop+o+\ /P +p+ + \ / P BqPpP\ /R + KhHr\ After I played this I became concerned White could just win a pawn by taking on c6 and a5. But this actually plays into black s hands. For example, 16 Bxc6 Bxc6 17 Bxa5 Bxe4 18 dxe4 d3 19 Qd1 Nxe4 20 Ne3 d2+ 21 Kf1 Bxe3 22 fxe3 Qf6+ 16 Bb5 Bb6 [16...b6] 17 Qd1 Na7? [Here I decided to defend passively when I still should be trying to open the center and seize the initiative. I was clearly too 7

10 8 Virginia Chess Newsletter worried about my a pawn instead of concentrating on the White king Nh5 was indicated, offering a pawn to get the position open and play my thematic f5 break. 18 Bxc6 (if 18 Rb1 f5 19 b4 axb4 20 axb4 Nf4 Black is winning) 18...Bxc6 19 Qxg4 Nf4 20 Bxf4 Rhg8 21 Qh3 exf4 with approximate equality.] 18 Bxd7 Qxd7 19 b4 axb4 20 axb4 c5 21 Qb3 cxb4 22 Bxb4 Nc6 23 c5 Ba7 24 Ng3 Nxb4 25 Qxb4 Qc7 [25...Qc6 was much better than the game as it leaves the c7 square as a flight square for the king.] 26 N1e2 Qxc5 27 Qa4 Rd6 28 O-O Ra6 29 Qb3 Rxa1? [Exchanging the active rook for a passive one on f1 (after White recaptures). Black tries to hang on to his pawn at all costs to have something for the suffering that his exposed king will endure. It would be far better to give up the extra pawn to free his position, eg 29...Qb6 30 Qxf7 Qc7 31 Qb3 Qb6 32 Qd1 Rxa1 by exchanging now we are not activating the rook on f1 33 Qxa1 Nd7 34 Rb1 Qe6 35 Nf5 with a slight plus for White.] 30 Rxa1 Qc7 31 Qa2 b6 [31...Qb6 32 Qxf7 Rd8 33 Nf5 Nd7 might have been a slightly better option.] 32 Rc1 Qd7 33 Nf5 [All these problems are caused by the foolish exchange.] Qe6 34 Qa3 Rc8 35 Ra1 Rc7 36 Qf8+ Rc8 37 Qxh6 Nxe4 [A desperate move in time trouble; 37...Kb7 38 Qd2 Rc5 still offered reasonable chances to save the game.] 38 dxe4 d3 39 Neg3 Qxh6 40 Nxh6 d2 41 Ne2 b5 42 Nxg4 Bd4 [42... b4 43 Nxe5 (43 Rb1 Ka8 44 Ne3 Bxe3 45 fxe3 b3) 43...b3 44 Nd3] 43 Rd1 Rc2 44 Kf1 b4 45 Nxd4 exd4 46 Ke2 b3 47 Kd3 Ra2 48 Rb1 Rb2 49 Rd1 Ra2 50 Kxd4 b2 51 Kc3 Kc8? [51...Ra1 is better but still can t save the game: 52 Rxd2 b1q 53 Rb2+ Qxb2+ 54 Kxb2] 52 Ne3 1-0 Andy Huang - Robert Fischer 2016 Chesapeake Open Ruy Lopez Notes by Robert Fischer 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 Nf6 4 Qe2 Bc5 5 c3 O-O 6 Bxc6 bxc6 7 Nxe5 [In this variation Black often gambits a pawn to get the bishop pair and open lines. His light squared bishop can become especially dangerous.] 7...Re8 8 d4 d6 [I should be more patient here and retreat my dark squared bishop, eg 8...Bb6 9 Bg5 c5 10 Ng4 d5 with complicated play.] 9 Nxc6 Qd7 10 Ne5 dxe5 11 dxc5 Qc6 [Black should have enough compensation for the pawn after 11...a5 12 O-O Ba6 13 c4 Qd4 14 Nd2 Qxc5] 12 O-O a5? [But now this move is too slow Ba6 recovers the pawn with an equal game, eg 13 c4 Qxe4 14 Qxe4 Nxe4] 13 Re1 Ba6 14 c4 Qxc5 15 b3 a4 16 Bb2 Bb7 17 Nd2 Rad8 18 Bc3 a3 19 b4 Qa7 20 Qe3 Qa4 21 f3 Bc8 22 Nb3 Nd7 [Black is busted and Andy plays the next part of the game precisely.] 23 Rad1 f6 24 Qe2 Qa7+ 25 Kh1 Kf7? [It s not a good idea to bring the king to the center with queens and rooks still on the board, but Black is really struggling to find something good to do.] 26 c5 Nf8 27 Na5 Rxd1 28 Rxd1 Ne6 29 Qc4 Kf8 30 Qb3? [Definitely the wrong direction; Andy is

11 #3 trying to pick up the pawn on a3, but he allows me to establish a bind on the light squares. It was better to play 30 b5 and Black is just smothered. Of course it is understandable that White wanted to be two pawns up, but in fact this made his task much harder.] 30...Nf4 31 Qxa3 Qa6 32 Qb2 Qb5 33 Qc2 Bd7 34 a3 g5 35 Qf2 Qa4 36 Qe1 Bb5 [Compare this position to the one White could have had by playing 30 b4 and you can see that he has considerably complicated his task.] 37 Qd2 Nd3 38 Ra1 Ke7 39 Kg1 Rd8 40 Qd1 [Now I miss my chance.] 40...Nf4? [Black s active pieces and light square bind compensate for his pawn minus after 40...Nxc5 41 Qxa4 Nxa4] 41 Qxa4 Bxa4 42 Kf2 Rd3 43 Be1 Kd7 44 Nc4 Rb3 45 Bd2 Nd Ke2 Bb5 47 Na5 / \ /+ Ol+ +o\ / + + O +\ /HnP O O \ / P +p+ +\ /Pt+j+p+ \ / + Bk+pP\ /R \ 47 Rb2 [Black achieves a bind that should be enough to draw after 47...Nb2+ 48 Ke1 Rd3 49 Rb1 Na4 50 Rb3 Rxb3 51 Nxb3] 48 a4 Nf4+ 49 Kd1 Be2+ 50 Ke1 Bd3 51 g3 Ne6 52 Ra3 Rb1+ 53 Kf2 Bf1 54 Be1 Bh3 55 Nc4 Nd4 56 Rd3 Be6 57 Ne3 Kc8 58 Bc3 Bh3 59 g4 Ne6 60 Nd5 Nf4 61 Nxf4 gxf4 62 Be1 Rb2+ 63 Rd2 Rb1 64 Ra2 Kb7 65 a5 c6 66 Rd2 Rxb4 67 Rd7+ Kc8 68 Bxb4 Kxd7 69 a6 Kc7 70 Ba5+ Kb8 71 Bb6 Ka8 72 Ke2 Kb8 73 Bd8 Ka7 74 Bxf6 Kxa6 75 Bxe5 Kb5 76 Bd4 h5 77 gxh5 Be6 78 h6 Bg8 79 Kf1 Bh7 80 Kg photo by Michael Hanke

12 10 Virginia Chess Newsletter Reflections Reflections Looking Back on an Amateur Chess Career Eugene Brown, This is an article that I d hoped I wouldn t have written for many years to come. My friend Ronald Eugene Brown passed away suddenly this May. He was sixty-four years old. A few of you might remember him from the Virginia Commonwealth University Chess Club back in the 1980 s. He directed my very first rated tournament, the 1984 Richmond City Junior Chess Championship, and for several years he was President of the VCU Chess Club. He also produced one of the first local cable television shows on chess called, I believe, Chess Line. GM Edmar Mednis, who played in several US Championships and wrote many popular books, was a guest during one episode while in Richmond to conduct a simul at VCU. Eugene was subsequently instrumental in bringing US champions Samuel Reshevsky and Lev Alburt for simuls also. (See Reflections in Virginia Chess #2015-5). Eugene (he changed the name he went by several years ago from his first name Ron to his middle name) wrestled with Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) his entire adult life. If you are not familiar with it, it can be a terrible, progressive neurological disorder. It can have a profound impact on the sufferer s life and Eugene s experience was worse than Eugene Brown with his book Eugene Dreams: Poems by R Eugene Brown most. He traveled the country in vain seeking treatment; there is currently no cure. In later years he sought relief in the form of diversion and distraction, nurturing a prodigious talent at insightful poetry and dabbling in photography. The same unpleasant sensations caused by the ravages of RLS that brought such suffering were in part what led him, or perhaps impelled is a better word,

13 #3 11 to pursue promoting chess with incredible vigor for the brief few years he was involved. Unable to sleep due to the pain, he was often up all hours of the night, and when I was much younger it was great to have a friend who stayed up long after my late night job hours ended. We spent many early morning hours playing blitz and going over games. Even the night of his passing, we talked for a couple of hours on the phone. Often our conversations delved into the top players of the day or opening lines or fantastic games recently played. He encouraged me to write this column and gave me many ideas. I d always wished he d return to chess, as I thoroughly enjoyed the events he organized back in the 80 s. That and the fact that I never managed to defeat him in a tournament game. Sadly, he never did play again. As the RLS progressed, the increasingly chronic inability to sleep began affecting his memory, organization of thought, etc. Eugene began having serious problems personally and professionally as a result. Never able to obtain satisfactory medical treatment, he no longer wished to engage in competitive endeavors, preferring the quieter pursuits of poetry and photography. But without his efforts, I would never have developed chess as my one preferred hobby and leisure pursuit. It has brought me many a happy hour, introduced me to many fascinating people, and I m grateful to Eugene for providing a club when there was none other available in Richmond. But more than that, I shall very much miss our conversations and friendship. His battle with RLS was courageous. I ve never known anyone who could experience such lows and rebound again and again and again with such incredible enthusiasm. He was exceptionally inspiring. I shall miss my friend. Presented here are the games that I played against Eugene, in chronological order, along with a draw he played in a simul against three-time US Champion Lev Alburt, all taking place in a brief two year period before he quit playing to wrestle the interminable disease that slowly consumed him over the subsequent decades. Eugene Brown - Mark Warriner VCU Quad 1984 Queen s Gambit Accepted 1 Nf3 d5 2 d4 e6 3 c4 dxc4 4 Qa4+ [Later to be championed by Kramnik and Krasenkow, this moves wasn t as well known then.] 4...Bd7 [Not played very often. Korchnoi is the only top player to attempt this. He wound up with the same result, after playing much better than me...] 5 Qxc4 b6 [Don t ask what I was thinking, it makes me shudder now. 5...Nf6 looks a lot better. Curiously though, there is one subsequent game played with this variation and Black won.] 6 Bg5 [6 Nc3 was to be preferred.] 6...Be7 [Biskopics-Juhasz, Paks 1997 was the above-mentioned game: 6...f6 7 Bd2 c5 8 e3 Bd6 9 Be2 Ne7 10 Nc3 Qc7 11 O-O Nbc6 12 dxc5 Bxc5 13 Ne4 Bd6 14 Nxd6+ Qxd6 15 Rfd1 Qc7 16 b4 Rc8 17 Rac1

14 12 Virginia Chess Newsletter Qb7 18 Qh4 Ng6 19 Qg3 e5 20 Bc4 Nce7 21 h3 Nf5 22 Qh2 Ke7 23 b5 Rc5 24 Bb4 Rc8 25 Bxc5+ Rxc5 26 a4 Qc7 27 Nd2 Be6 28 e4 Nd4 29 Qh1 Bxc4 30 Nxc4 Ne2+ 31 Kf1 Nxc1 32 Rxc1 Rxc4 0-1] 7 Bxe7 Nxe7 8 Na3 O-O 9 Rc1 c6 [Black is back in the thick of things after 9...c5] 10 e3 Bc8 11 Qc2 Bb7 12 Bd3 g6 13 Nc4 Nd7 14 Nd6 Qc7 15 Nxb7 Qxb7 16 h4 Kg7? [Begging for trouble. In fairness, this was just my sixth rated game.] 17 h5 Rac8? [had to try 17...Nf6] 18 hxg6? [better to have gotten the White queen off of the c-file prior to commencing operations] 18...hxg6 19 Qa4 Rh8 20 Ke2 a5 21 Be4 Nf6 22 Rxh8 Kxh8 23 Qc2 Nxe4? [Oops. Again, 6th rated game.] 24 Qxe4 Qa6+? [Just making it worse, getting the my queen all out of position.] 25 Kd2 Qb5? [Dropping the knight after 26 Qh4+] 26 b3? [yet another curious case of mutual blindness] 26...Kg7 27 Qe5+ Qxe5 28 Nxe5 c5 [28...Rc7 avoided creating the ensuing weakened pawns] 29 dxc5 bxc5 30 Nd3 Kf6 31 Nxc5 Nc6 32 Nd7+ Ke7 33 Nb6 Rd8+ 34 Ke2 Nb4 35 a3 Nd5 36 Nxd5+ Rxd5 37 e4? [It was mostly a mop-up operation until this. Now Black can try to stick around a bit longer.] 37...Rb5 38 Rc3 Rb7 39 Rd3 Rd7? [You ve read it before, you ll read it now, and you ll read it again in the future: don t trade material when you re down.] 40 Rxd7+ Kxd7 41 Kd3 Kc6 42 b4 a4 43 Kc4 Kb6 44 e5 g5 45 g4 Kc6 46 b5+ Kb6 47 Kb4 Kb7 48 Kxa4 Kb6 49 Kb4 Ka7 50 Kc5 Kb7 51 a4 Kc7 52 a5 Kb8 53 Kc6 Ka7 54 Kc7 Ka8 55 b6 f6 56 b7+ Ka7 57 b8q+ 1-0 Mark Warriner Eugene Brown VCU 1985 Alekhine 1 e4 Nf6 [One of Eugene s two favorite openings, the other being the Sokolsky or Orangutan, 1 b4] 2 e5 Nd5 3 d4 d6 4 c4 Nb6 5 f4 dxe5 6 fxe5 Bf5 7 Nc3 Nc6 8 Be3 e6 9 Nf3 Nb4 10 Rc1 c5 11 a3 cxd4 12 Bg /t+ WlN T\ /Oo+ +ooo\ / J +o+ +\ /+ + PnB \ / JpO + +\ /P H +h+ \ / P + +pp\ /+ RqKb+r\ I d like to tell you we were following home prep and copying the brilliant Znosko Borovsky - Alekhine, Paris 1925, which continued 12...dxc3! 13 Bxd8 Rxd8 14 Qb3 cxb2 15 Qxb2 Na4 16 Qa1 Nc2+ 17 Rxc2 Bxc2 18 Nd4 Bg6 19 c5 Nxc5 20 Bb5+ Nd7 21 Qc3 a6 22 Bxd7+ Rxd7 23 Qc8+ Rd8 24 Qxb7 Rxd4 25 Qc6+ Rd7 26 O-O Bd3 27 Rxf7 Bc5+ 28 Kh1 Bb5 29 Qxe6+ Re7 30 Rxe7+ Bxe7 31 Qc8+ Bd8 32 Qe6+ Be7 33 Qc8+ Bd8 34 Qe6+ ½-½.Yes, that s what I d like to tell you that There is even another way to continue after 12...dxc3! 13 Bxd8. Janosevic-Cafferty, Birmingham 1975 demonstrated 13 cxb2 14 Bg5 bxc1q 15 Qxc1 Nc2+ 16 Kf2 Bc5+ 17 Kg3 h6 18 Bd2 Bxa3 19 Qb1 O-O 20 Qb3 Nd7 21 Be3 Bc5 22 Bf2 Bxf2+ 23 Kxf2 Nc5

15 # Qb2 Rfd8 25 Be2 Ne4+ 26 Kg1 Ne3 27 Qb3 Ng4 28 h3 Ngf2 29 Rh2 Nc5 30 Qe3 Nfe4 31 g4 Bh7 32 g5 hxg5 33 Rg2 Bg6 34 Nxg5 Nxg5 35 Qxg5 a5 36 h4 a4 37 h5 a3 38 hxg6 fxg6 39 Qxg6 Rd7 40 Rh2 1-0 However, if one doesn t find 12...dxc3! the other option is not much worse f6 13 exf6 gxf6 14 axb4? [14 Nxd4] 14...fxg5? [14...dxc3] 15 Nxd4 Bxb4 [16 Nf5 Qd1+ 17 Kd1 O-O-O+ 18 Kc2 exf5 was better] 16 Be2? O-O 17 O-O? [Again, had to try Nf5, because of...] 17...Bc5 18 Nb5 a6? [works, but 18...e5 was better still] 19 b4 Bxb4 20 Nxf5 Bc5+ [better axb5] 21 Kh1 exf5 22 Nd6?? [I must have hallucinated 22...Bd6 23 c5, thinking I was somehow getting a piece back. Doesn t work for all kinds of reasons that I ll let you work out, if it isn t already obvious.] 22...Qxd6 23 Qxd6 Bxd6 24 c5 Bf4 25 Bc4+ Nxc4 26 Rxc4 Rac8 27 g3 Be3 28 Re1 Rxc5 29 Rb4? Bd2 0-1 The next three games were all drawn in a ladder match. The funny thing is that they all ended with bishops of opposite colors. We weren t aiming for that, but it was an amusing coincidence that we often laughed about for decades after. Eugene Brown - Mark Warriner VCU Ladder Match 1985 Queen s Pawn/Torre 1 Nf3 d5 2 d4 Nf6 3 Bg5 e6 4 Nbd2 Be7 5 e3 O-O 6 Bd3 [So far, an old and familiar position.] 6...Nc6 [Suddenly, not so much. Not really a great alternative to the more tried and true options, but not awful.] 7 c3 Nd7 8 Bf Bf6 9 e4 e5 /t+nw Tl+\ /OoOj+oOo\ / +j+ N +\ /+ +oo + \ / + PpB +\ /+ Pb+h+ \ /pp H PpP\ /R +qk +r\ My TN and actually the best continuation. 9...dxe4 was better for White after 10 Nxe4 b6 11 O-O Bb7 12 Re1 in Filippov-Dokutchaev, Orsk 2002 although it ended in a poorly played draw: 12 h6 13 Bc2 Ne7 14 Qd3 Ng6 15 Nxf6+ Nxf6 16 Bg3 Rc8 17 Ne5 Nxe5 18 Bxe5 g6 19 Qh3 Kh7 20 Re3 c5 21 f4 cxd4 22 Rg3? (22 Bxd4) 22 dxc3 23 f5? (now Black should win) exf5 24 Bxf5 cxb2 25 Bxb2 Rc5 26 Rf1 Ba6? (26 gxf5; the text puts White back on top) 27 Bxf6 Rxf5 28 Qxf5 gxf5 29 Bxd8 Bxf1 30 Bf6 Bb5 31 Rg7+ Kh8 32 Rxf7+ Kg8 ½ ½ but White could have played on with 33 Rg7+ Kh8 34 Bc3. 10 dxe5 [Probably 10 Be3 or 10 exd5 were better.] 10...Ndxe5 11 Nxe5 Nxe5 12 Bxe5 Bxe5 13 Nf3 dxe4 14 Bxe4 Qf6 [14...Qe7 was better, though the text isn t bad.] 15 Qc2 g6 16 O-O c6 17 Rfe1 [Missing the chance to prevent the opposite color bishop situation with 17 Nxe5] 17...Bc7 18 Rad1 Bg4 19 h3?! [A gentle rebuke,

16 14 Virginia Chess Newsletter as this gave Black a chance to exploit a small inaccuracy, but probably not too serious.] 19...Bxf3 20 Bxf3 Rad8? [But Black fails to try and capitalize with 20...Qf4] 21 Qe4 Rxd1 22 Rxd1 ½ ½ Mark Warriner Eugene Brown VCU Ladder Match 1985 Semi-Slav I remember this particular game as being fun because it was played at Eugene s home on Halloween. Lots of trick and treating going on, both on and off the board! 1 c4 [My first trick, as I didn t normally play this too much until that year.] 1...Nf6 2 d4 e6 3 Nc3 d5 4 Nf3 dxc4 5 Qa4+ [And now the treat, as this was similar to an earlier game we d played with colors reversed.] 5...c6 6 Qxc4 Nbd7 [Karpov, Korchnoi, Kasparov and Timman would all vary from my continuation in later years with 6...b5. No doubt they learned a lot from study our game. Ahem ] 7 g3 Qa5 [The first new move and not an altogether bad one.] 8 Bg2 Bb4 9 Bd2 O-O 10 O-O Re8 11 a3 Bxc3 12 Bxc3 Qh5 [This is taking some chances. The queen probably belongs still on the queenside, on c7 for now.] 13 Ne5? [But this smells. Getting the rooks out was better, either 13 Rfd1 or 13 Rac1 No need to go mangling my pawn structure.] 13...Nxe5 14 dxe5 Ng4 /t+n+t+l+\ /Oo+ +ooo\ / +o+o+ +\ /+ + P +w\ / +q+ +j+\ /P B + P \ / P +ppbp\ /R + +rk \ This is where our metal friend gets weird. Engines indicate 15 Rfd1 Qh Kf1 as the best continuation for White. I really don t think too many humans of any strength level would go for this. But maybe I m overlooking something more apparent to stronger players. 15 h3 Nxe5 16 Qd4 f6 17 Rfe1 [At this point I can t even understand what I was doing, much less remember. Seems like White has gone down the rabbit hole.] 17...Qf7 18 Rad1 Ng6 19 Rd2 e5 20 Qd6 Be6 21 Red1 Bb3 22 Rc1 Qe7 23 Bb4 Qxd6 24 Rxd6 Rad8 25 Rc3 [Though clearly worse, White is somehow holding on by the hair of his chin. This is one of those positions I m not sure engines evaluation properly. At least I know I don t know how to evaluate this properly.] 25...Bd1 26 Rxd8 Rxd8 27 Rd3 Rxd3 28 exd3 f5 29 Bc5 [White s survives by virtue of

17 #3 15 the strength of the bishop pair.] b6? [Conceding equality, whereas Be2 or 29...a6 kept up the pressure.] 30 Bd6 Be2 31 Bxc6 Bxd3? [Now White is even the one pressing. Just 31...Kf7 was indicated.] 32 Bd5+ Kh8 33 Bf7? [missing 33 h4] 33...b5? [This should have lost to again 34 h4, but I was set on a plan and stopped thinking. Intent on bailing to another opposite color bishop refuge, I wasn t adjusting to each change in situation. Shame, shame!] 34 Bxg6?? hxg6 35 Bxe5 a5 36 h4 a4 37 Kg2 Kg8 38 Kf3 Kf7 39 Ke3 Bc2 40 Kf4 Bb1 41 f3 Bc2 42 g4 fxg4 43 fxg4 Bb1 ½ ½ Eugene Brown - Mark Warriner VCU Ladder Match 1985 Sokolsky 1 b4 [of course] 1...e6 2 Bb2 Nf6 3 c4 [But this was a surprise. Not 3 b5 as recommended by our friend Lev, and not in the books (this was the 80s, no databases not that this move is in one of those now either.) What to do...?] 3...b6?! [Well obviously the thing to have done was 3...Bb4. But noooo... I was having none of that, eschewing the maxim that the best way to refute a gambit is to accept it.] 4 Nf3 Bb7 [and again!] 5 e3 Bxb4 [okay, finally] 6 Nc3 O-O 7 Be2 c5 8 Qc2 d6 [After 8...d5 Black would have been looking pretty good. Now, not so much.] 9 Rd1 [9 O-O was marginally better] 9...e5 [Either 9...Nbd7 or 9...d5 would have been a bit superior, probably.] 10 d4 [Attempting active counter-measures, but castling was necessary.] 10...exd4 11 exd4 Nbd7 [no clue why I didn t try 11...Ne4] 12 O-O Re8 13 d5 Bc8? [Choking the bit, instead of 13...Bxc3 14 Bxc3 b5 15 cxb5] 14 Nb5 Ne4 15 Ne1? [Whoa (no pun intended)! But this is a blunder. Black s pieces suddenly spring to life.] 15...a6 16 Na3 Nef6 [not terrible, but 16...b5 was better] 17 f4? [compounding White s problems and creating another weakness] 17...Qe7? [which Black fails to exploit, again by...b5] 18 Bd3? [sinking further in the mire] 18...Nf8? [18...Qe3+ 19 Qf2 (19 Kh1 Bxe1 and the bishop is immune due to back-rank mate threats) 19...Qxf2+ 20 Kxf2 Ng4+ 21 Kg1 Bxa3 22 Bxa3 Ne3] 19 h3 Qe3+ 20 Kh2 Qe7? [20... Bg4! 21 Rb1 (21 hxg4 Nxg4+ 22 Kh1 and again 22...Bxe1) 21...Be2 22 Qxe2 Qxe2 23 Bxe2 Rxe2 24 Bxf6 gxf6 25 Nec2 Bxa3 26 Nxa3 Rxa2] 21 f5? [giving back the advantage in view of tactics] 21...Ra7? [and missing said tactics: 21...Ng4+! 22 hxg4 Qh4+ 23 Kg1 Bxe1] 22 Nb1? [The pendulum continues swinging. 22 Nf3] 22...Ng4+! [finally spotting some tactics] 23 hxg4 Qh4+ 24 Kg1 Bxe1 25 Nd2 Bxd2? [Inexplicably missing the obvious Bg3! all I can say is, amateur chess. ] 26 Qxd2 Rae7? [sloppily allowing another opportunity] 27 f6 Re3 28 fxg7 Ng6 29 Qf2? [29 Bf6 Wow, how many missed chances were there in this game? Too many!] 29...Qxf2+ 30 Rxf2 Re1+? [Ugh! Not again 30...Bxg4] 31 Rf1? [31 Rxe1 Rxe1+ 32 Kh2] 31...Rxd1 32 Rxd1 Bxg4 [Black is up a pawn but against the bishop pair.] 33 Rf1 Be2? [I can only apologize for the hash Ne5 34 Bxe5 dxe5 and Black can try pressing.] 34 Re1 Nf4 35

18 16 Virginia Chess Newsletter Bc2? [35 Bb1] 35...f6? [35...Rb8 kept pressing Black s advantage. Now White can try for the win.] 36 Bxf6? [But not this way; 36 Bc1 Ng6 37 Kf2 and Black drops a piece.] 36...Bh5? [Black s back to okay after 36...Nh5] 37 Rxe8+ Bxe8 38 Kf2 [38 Be7] 38...Ng6? [The hits just keep coming. My last move walked into 39 Bf5 b5 40 cxb5 axb5 41 Be7, etc] 39 Ke3? Kf7? [39...Bd7 was the only hope to try] 40 g8q+? [The end of a cavalcade of errors. I m guessing time pressure had to have been in effect, as many errors as were committed. The winning line was 40 Bf5 Nf8 (40...Kg8 41 Be6+ Bf7 42 a4 h6 43 Ke4 and the engines start seeing forced mates) 41 gxf8q+ Kxf8 42 Bxh7] 40...Kxg8 41 Bxg6 Bxg6 42 Be7 ½ ½ Lev Alburt - Eugene Brown Simultaneous Exhibition, Richmond 1986 Sokolsky 1 b4 [In part a gift from the Grandmaster to his host: Eugene had told Lev this was his favorite way to open a game. I refer you again to Virginia Chess # for more back story on how Lev essayed this on several boards.] 1...Nf6 2 Bb2 e6 3 b5 d5 4 e3 c5 5 c4 Be7 6 Nf3 O-O 7 Be2 Nbd7 8 O-O [This line scores rather favorably for Black, though White is applying the toughest treatment available. I don t know whether either player was aware of the theory, though I wouldn t bet against that in Lev s case!] 8...b6 9 a4 Bb7 10 a5 [Leaving behind known play. But our metal friend is not persuaded and Eugene answers correctly.] 10...a6 11 cxd5 exd5 [11... Nd5 may have been better.] 12 axb6 Qxb6 13 Na3 Rfe8 [Either 13...axb5 or 13...Ne4 were probably preferable] 14 Ne5 Bf8 15 Nxd7 Nxd7 16 Rb1 a5 [Here again 16...axb5 might have complicated White s task.] 17 Bf3 Ne5 18 Bxe5 Rxe5 19 d4 cxd4 20 Qxd4 Qxd4 21 exd4 Re6 [Neither side has committed any big mistakes, but engines suggest that White may have played a few second best moves while Eugene regularly made the optimal choice. Nicely done versus a GM in a simul!] 22 Nc2 Rb6 23 Ne3 Bb4 Eugene Brown, seated, shaking hands with then then US Champion GM Lev Alburt after their draw in March 1986

19 # Nxd5 Bxd5 25 Bxd5 Rd8 26 Bc6 Rxd4 27 Rfd1 Rxd1+ 28 Rxd1 Rb8 29 Rd7 Rc8? [The first real misstep and now White can finally press Black.] 30 Ra7 g6 31 g4 Rb8 32 Kf1 Kg7 33 Ke2 [a little surprise Lev didn t jump on 33 g5] 33...Kf6 [Perhaps 33...Rd8 was more accurate.] 34 h4 Rd8 35 b6 Bc5? [instead of 35...Rd2+ going on active defense, a mistake that probably should have cost Black the game] 36 Ra6 Rb8 [potentially compounding the problem, whereas 36...Ke7 would have brought Black s king closer] 37 b7 Bb4 38 Ra8 Bd6 39 Rxa5 Ke7 40 Kd3? [The position requires nuance either 40 Ra6 or 40 Ra4 first, to give the rook more mobility. Still, not the end of matters. Not yet.] 40...Kd8 41 Kc4 [41 Bd5; 41 g5] 41...Kc7 42 Kb5 [42 Bg2 may be better] / T + + +\ /+pl +o+o\ / +bn +o+\ /Rk+ + + \ / + + +pp\ / \ / + + P +\ / \ 42...Bb4? [To use an expression that Eugene taught me trying to be cute instead of clever. ] 43 Kxb4? [But sometimes cute works! The bishop should be ignored for now and either 43 Ra4 or 43 Ra2 would lead to victory. For example 43 Ra4 Be7 44 Rc4 Bxh4 45 Ka6 Bxf2 46 Bb5+ Kd8 (46...Kd6 47 Rc8 Rxb7 48 Kxb7 is also winning) 47 Rf4 etc] 43...Kxc6 [Now it s just a draw.] 44 Rc5+ Kxb7 45 Rb5+ Kc7 46 Rxb8 Kxb8 47 Kc5 Kc7 48 Kd5 Kd7 49 Ke5 Ke7 50 g5 Ke8 51 Kf6 Kf8 52 f3 Kg8 53 f4 Kf8 54 f5 gxf5 55 Kxf5 Kg7 56 h5 h6 ½ ½ A feather in Eugene s cap. I can still see him grin, shrug his shoulders with a smile, and give a playful little honking hmmmhhh! with a twinkle in his eye. He loved a humorous twist of events. And indeed we all enjoy getting away with one, especially against a much stronger player. In closing, I quote one of my favorite of his poems that was inspired by his battle with RLS. We chess players can certainly relate, regardless of whether our preferred time control be Blitz, OTB, or Correspondence. Time Is Time is Attraction Time is Choices Time is Borrowing Time is a Double Rainbow Time is When your power comes back on Time is Evaporation Time is Diversity Time is a Cemetery Time is Wireless Time is The Guardian of All R Eugene Brown

20 In This Issue: Cherry Blossom Classic...1 Denis Strenzwilk...2 Barry Quillon...11 Readers' Games & Analysis...6 Mark Warner Reflections (Eugene Brown)...10 Upcoming Events...5 VCF Info...inside front cover Virginia Chess 1370 South Braden Crescent Norfolk, VA j j j j j j j j j j Presorted Standard US Postage PAID Orange, VA Permit No. 97

Ollivier,Alain (1600) - Priser,Jacques (1780) [D05] Fouesnant op 10th (7),

Ollivier,Alain (1600) - Priser,Jacques (1780) [D05] Fouesnant op 10th (7), Ollivier,Alain (1600) - Priser,Jacques (1780) [D05] Fouesnant op 10th (7), 28.10.2004 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 d5 3.e3 e6 4.Bd3 Generally speaking, the main idea of this opening (it doesn t fight for initiative)

More information

Helbig, Uwe (2227) - Zvara, Petr (2420) [A45] Oberliga Bayern 0607 (9.6),

Helbig, Uwe (2227) - Zvara, Petr (2420) [A45] Oberliga Bayern 0607 (9.6), Helbig, Uwe (2227) - Zvara, Petr (2420) [A45] Oberliga Bayern 0607 (9.6), 22.04.2007 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bg5 The Trompowsky attack is quite a sharp line but with accurate play black has little trouble equalizing.

More information

Adamczewski,Jedrzej (1645) - Jankowski,Aleksander (1779) [C02] Rubinstein Memorial op-c 40th Polanica Zdroj (2),

Adamczewski,Jedrzej (1645) - Jankowski,Aleksander (1779) [C02] Rubinstein Memorial op-c 40th Polanica Zdroj (2), Adamczewski,Jedrzej (1645) - Jankowski,Aleksander (1779) [C02] Rubinstein Memorial op-c 40th Polanica Zdroj (2), 20.08.2008 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.Nf3 Bd7 6.a3 Qb6 Although this line is entirely

More information

Jiang, Louie (2202) - Barbeau, Sylvain (2404) [C74] Montreal Pere Noel (4),

Jiang, Louie (2202) - Barbeau, Sylvain (2404) [C74] Montreal Pere Noel (4), Jiang, Louie (2202) - Barbeau, Sylvain (2404) [C74] Montreal Pere Noel (4), 29.12.2008 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 d6 5.c3 Bg4 This move isn t the best choice; it s a rather dubious one. This pin

More information

Step 2 plus. 3 Mate in one / Double check: A 1) 1. Re8# 2) 1... Rb1# 9) 1. Nxd6# 10) 1... exd4# 11) 1. Rc7# 12) 1. Rc4# 6) 1. d8q# 3) 1...

Step 2 plus. 3 Mate in one / Double check: A 1) 1. Re8# 2) 1... Rb1# 9) 1. Nxd6# 10) 1... exd4# 11) 1. Rc7# 12) 1. Rc4# 6) 1. d8q# 3) 1... Step 2 plus 3 Mate in one / Double check: A 1) 1. Re8# 5) 1. Bxd5# 2) 1.... Rb1# 6) 1. d8q# 3) 1.... Ng3# 7) 1. Nf7# 4) 1.... Bxc3# 8) 1. Nf8# 4 Mate in one / Double check: B 1) 1. Nb4# 5) 1. Bg5# 2) 1....

More information

Capablanca s Advice. Game #1. Rhys Goldstein, February 2012

Capablanca s Advice. Game #1. Rhys Goldstein, February 2012 Capablanca s Advice Rhys Goldstein, February 2012 Capablanca ended his book My Chess Career with this advice: have the courage of your convictions. If you think a move is good, make it. Experience is the

More information

Limpert, Michael (2183) - Schmidt, Matthias1 (2007) [C16] GER CupT qual Germany (1),

Limpert, Michael (2183) - Schmidt, Matthias1 (2007) [C16] GER CupT qual Germany (1), Limpert, Michael (2183) - Schmidt, Matthias1 (2007) [C16] GER CupT qual Germany (1), 16.01.2010 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 This move is regarded as the most promising, yet risky, way to gain an opening advantage

More information

Queens Chess Club Championship 2016

Queens Chess Club Championship 2016 Queens Chess Club Championship 2016 Round 6 Welcome to the 2016 Queens Chess Club Championship!! The time control is G/120, G/115 d5 or G/1:55 d5. A delay clock is preferred. Please bring sets and clocks.

More information

Queens Chess Club Championship 2016

Queens Chess Club Championship 2016 Queens Chess Club Championship 2016 Round 5 Welcome to the 2016 Queens Chess Club Championship!! The time control is G/120, G/115 d5 or G/1:55 d5. A delay clock is preferred. Please bring sets and clocks.

More information

Queens Chess Club Championship 2016

Queens Chess Club Championship 2016 Queens Chess Club Championship 2016 Round 1 Welcome to the 2016 Queens Chess Club Championship!! The time control is G/120, G/115 d5 or G/1:55 d5. A delay clock is preferred. Please bring sets and clocks.

More information

Lahno, Kateryna (2472) - Carlsen, Magnus (2567) [B56] Lausanne YM 5th (3.2),

Lahno, Kateryna (2472) - Carlsen, Magnus (2567) [B56] Lausanne YM 5th (3.2), Lahno, Kateryna (2472) - Carlsen, Magnus (2567) [B56] Lausanne YM 5th (3.2), 20.09.2004 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 Bd7 From a wide range of main lines (e.g., 5...a6; 5...e6; 5...Nc6; 5...g6),

More information

Introduction 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. cxd5 exd5. 5. Bg5 Nbd7

Introduction 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. cxd5 exd5. 5. Bg5 Nbd7 Introduction Typical positions with the Karlsbad Pawn Structure involve the following arrangement of pawns: White: a2, b2, d4, e3, f2, g2, h2 and Black: a7, b7, c6, d5, f7, g7, h7. The variation takes

More information

A system against the Dutch Stonewall Defence

A system against the Dutch Stonewall Defence Page 1 of 5 A system against the Dutch Stonewall Defence Index Abstract Starting position Conclusions Relevant links Games download Further reading Abstract This technical white paper provides a system

More information

Shkapenko, Pavel (2404) - Kalvaitis, Sigitas (2245) [D20] Cracovia op 18th Krakow (8),

Shkapenko, Pavel (2404) - Kalvaitis, Sigitas (2245) [D20] Cracovia op 18th Krakow (8), Shkapenko, Pavel (2404) - Kalvaitis, Sigitas (2245) [D20] Cracovia op 18th Krakow (8), 03.01.2008 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6 Black goes for the Russian Defense which gives him good chances to leveli the game in

More information

7) 1. Nf7# 8) 1. Nf8# 9) 1. Nd6# 10) 1... exd4# 11) 1. Rc7# 12) 1. Rc4# 7) 1. Ne4# 8) 1... Rxg3# 10) 1. Bxb5# 11) 1... Rc2# 12) 1.

7) 1. Nf7# 8) 1. Nf8# 9) 1. Nd6# 10) 1... exd4# 11) 1. Rc7# 12) 1. Rc4# 7) 1. Ne4# 8) 1... Rxg3# 10) 1. Bxb5# 11) 1... Rc2# 12) 1. Step 2 plus 3 Mate in one / Double check: A 1) 1. Re8# 2) 1.... Rb1# 3) 1.... Ng3# 4) 1.... Bxc3# 5) 1. Bxd5# 6) 1. d8q# 4 Mate in one / Double check: B 1) 1. Nb4# 2) 1.... Rf3# 3) Drawing 4) 1. Nd7# 5)

More information

Mini-Lessons from Short Games of the 21st Century

Mini-Lessons from Short Games of the 21st Century Mini-Lessons from Short Games of the 21st Century by IM Nikolay Minev #1: Exciting Short Stories From The Olympiads C70 Z. Al-Zendani Z. Dollah Istanbul (ol) 2000 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Ba4 g6 This

More information

4NCL Telford - Weekend 5 (by Steve Burke)

4NCL Telford - Weekend 5 (by Steve Burke) 4NCL Telford - Weekend 5 (by Steve Burke) With the recent announcement of the relocation of Divisions 3 and 4 South next season, there may be some adjustments as some of the more northerly midlands teams

More information

The Surprising Sacrifice: Bg6!!

The Surprising Sacrifice: Bg6!! The Surprising Sacrifice: Bg6!! By IM Nikolay Minev Some combinations are obvious and easily recognizable, others are surprising and not so easy to find. Among the last are all combination where the sacrifices

More information

rm0lkans opo0zpop 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0ZpZ0Z0 0Z0Z0o0Z Z0Z0Z0OB POPOPZ0O SNAQZRJ0 Paris Gambit (2) 0.1 Statistics and History 0.1.

rm0lkans opo0zpop 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0ZpZ0Z0 0Z0Z0o0Z Z0Z0Z0OB POPOPZ0O SNAQZRJ0 Paris Gambit (2) 0.1 Statistics and History 0.1. Paris Gambit (2) Database: 31-XII-2010 (4,399,153 games) Report: 1.g3 e5 2.Nh3 d5 3.f4 Bxh3 4.Bxh3 exf4 5.O-O (16 games) ECO: A00g [Amar: Paris Gambit] Generated by Scid 4.2.2, 2011.02.15 rm0lkans opo0zpop

More information

Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Summer 2017, Part 3 E. Olin Mastin, Editor. Position after 21...c5 (From prev. col.

Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Summer 2017, Part 3 E. Olin Mastin, Editor. Position after 21...c5 (From prev. col. Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Summer 2017, Part 3 E. Olin Mastin, Editor North Penn Chess Club 500 West Main Street Lansdale, PA 19446 www.northpennchessclub.org (215) 699-8418

More information

Opposite Coloured Bishops

Opposite Coloured Bishops Opposite Coloured Bishops Matt Marsh GAME 1: M. M. Marsh D. Chancey Kings Island Open, Nov. 11, 2006 3. Rc1 Bb6 4. Bb3 Re8 5. Rhe1 f5 6. Rcd1 Kh8 1... Rfd8 This position is about even because of opposite

More information

Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century

Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century By IM Nikolay Minev The Dutch Defense Under Pressure In the last decade the Dutch Defense is under pressure by sharp attacking variations characterized by

More information

Championship. Welcome to the 2012 Queens Chess Club Championship!!

Championship. Welcome to the 2012 Queens Chess Club Championship!! Queens Chess Club Championship Welcome to the 2012 Queens Chess Club Championship!! The time control is game in 2 hours with an analog clock, or game in 1 hour 55 minutes/115 minutes with a five second

More information

~ En Passant ~ Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club of Lansdale, PA Summer 2014, Part 3A E. Olin Mastin, Editor

~ En Passant ~ Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club of Lansdale, PA Summer 2014, Part 3A E. Olin Mastin, Editor Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club of Lansdale, PA Summer 2014, Part 3A E. Olin Mastin, Editor North Penn Chess Club 500 West Main Street Lansdale, PA 19446 www.northpennchessclub.org (215) 699-8418

More information

Chess Exhibition Match between Shannon Engine and Turing Engine

Chess Exhibition Match between Shannon Engine and Turing Engine Chess Exhibition Match between Shannon Engine and Turing Engine Ingo Althofer and Mathias Feist Preliminary Report Version 5 - April 17, 2012 Contact: ingo.althoefer@uni-jena.de Abstract Around 1950, Claude

More information

Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century

Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century By IM Nikolay Minev New Exciting Short Stories Among the Elite B41 B. Gelfand R. Ponomariov Khanty-Mansiysk (World Cup) 2009 1.d4 e6 2.c4 c5 3.Nf3 cxd4 4.Nxd4

More information

Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Winter 2017, Part 3 E. Olin Mastin, Editor. Position after 9.Bg3 (From prev. col.

Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Winter 2017, Part 3 E. Olin Mastin, Editor. Position after 9.Bg3 (From prev. col. Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Winter 2017, Part 3 E. Olin Mastin, Editor North Penn Chess Club 500 West Main Street Lansdale, PA 19446 www.northpennchessclub.org (215) 699-8418

More information

OPENING IDEA 3: THE KNIGHT AND BISHOP ATTACK

OPENING IDEA 3: THE KNIGHT AND BISHOP ATTACK OPENING IDEA 3: THE KNIGHT AND BISHOP ATTACK If you play your knight to f3 and your bishop to c4 at the start of the game you ll often have the chance to go for a quick attack on f7 by moving your knight

More information

rmblka0s opo0zpop 0Z0O0m0Z Z0Z0Z0Z0 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0Z0Z0 POPOPZPO SNAQJBMR Langheld Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History Statistics 0.1.

rmblka0s opo0zpop 0Z0O0m0Z Z0Z0Z0Z0 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0Z0Z0 POPOPZPO SNAQJBMR Langheld Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History Statistics 0.1. Database: 31-XII-2010 (4,399,153 games) Report: 1.f4 e5 2.fxe5 d6 3.exd6 Nf6 (25 games) ECO: A02 [Bird: From Gambit, Langheld Gambit] Generated by Scid 4.2.2, 2011.02.15 Langheld Gambit rmblka0s opo0zpop

More information

NEWS, INFORMATION, TOURNAMENTS, AND REPORTS

NEWS, INFORMATION, TOURNAMENTS, AND REPORTS 166 ICGA Journal September 2008 NEWS, INFORMATION, TOURNAMENTS, AND REPORTS THE 16 TH WORLD COMPUTER-CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP Beijing, China September 28 October 4, 2008 Omid David-Tabibi 1 Ramat-Gan, Israel

More information

winning outright the 2007 Absolute, (he tied for first in 1998) the 1992 Golden Knights, and 15 th US Championship (shown with 15 th USCCC trophy)

winning outright the 2007 Absolute, (he tied for first in 1998) the 1992 Golden Knights, and 15 th US Championship (shown with 15 th USCCC trophy) winning outright the 2007 Absolute, (he tied for first in 1998) the 1992 Golden Knights, and 15 th US Championship (shown with 15 th USCCC trophy) GAME OF THE MONTH THE CHECK IS IN THE MAIL November 2008

More information

IDENTIFYING KEY POSITIONS

IDENTIFYING KEY POSITIONS IDENTIFYING KEY POSITIONS In every chess game there are certain places where you need to spend more time to plan and calculate. We call these places KEY POSITIONS. Sometimes Key positions are objective

More information

The Evergreen Game. Adolf Anderssen - Jean Dufresne Berlin 1852

The Evergreen Game. Adolf Anderssen - Jean Dufresne Berlin 1852 The Evergreen Game Adolf Anderssen - Jean Dufresne Berlin 1852 Annotated by: Clayton Gotwals (1428) Chessmaster 10th Edition http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/evergreen_game 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4.

More information

Aaron C Pixton Age 16. Vestal, New York. Aaron began to play chess at

Aaron C Pixton Age 16. Vestal, New York. Aaron began to play chess at Tournament Bulletin The Players: Aaron C Pixton 2428. Age 16. Vestal, New York. Aaron began to play chess at the age. He has just finished 11 th grade at the Susquehanna School. Aaron is very proud of

More information

`Typical Chess Combination Puzzles`

`Typical Chess Combination Puzzles` `Typical Chess Combination Puzzles` by Bohdan Vovk Part II Typical Chess Combinations Covered: 1-10. See in Part I. Download it at www.chesselo.com 11. Use the First (Last) Horizontal 12. Destroy the King

More information

Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Winter 2017, Part 4 E. Olin Mastin, Editor

Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Winter 2017, Part 4 E. Olin Mastin, Editor Newsletter of the North Penn Chess Club, Lansdale, PA Winter 2017, Part 4 E. Olin Mastin, Editor North Penn Chess Club 500 West Main Street Lansdale, PA 19446 www.northpennchessclub.org (215) 699-8418

More information

Edition THRILLING CHESSBOARD ADVENTURES IN THIS C H E S S A D V O C A T E. Can you identify the correct move for White to win? V O L U M E T H R E E

Edition THRILLING CHESSBOARD ADVENTURES IN THIS C H E S S A D V O C A T E. Can you identify the correct move for White to win? V O L U M E T H R E E C H E S S A D V O C A T E V O L U M E THRILLING CHESSBOARD ADVENTURES IN THIS Detective INSIDE THIS ISSUE: GUEST ANNOTATOR Roy DeVault 10 Edition Can you identify the correct move for White to win? T H

More information

Revised Preliminary Award of the Study Tourney BILEK-75 JT

Revised Preliminary Award of the Study Tourney BILEK-75 JT Revised Preliminary Award of the Study Tourney BILEK-75 JT Theme: In an endgame study with win or draw stipulation some (more is better) unprotected pieces (not pawns) are not captured. At least two variants

More information

Caro-Kann Defense. 1. e4 c6 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 (Approx. 80% of Caro-Kann Games)

Caro-Kann Defense. 1. e4 c6 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 (Approx. 80% of Caro-Kann Games) Caro-Kann Defense 1. e4 c6 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 (Approx. 80% of Caro-Kann Games) The Caro-Kann Defense is named after H. Caro of Berlin and M. Kann of Vienna who analyzed the first analyzed the opening in the

More information

Li,Henry (2247) - Bobras,Piotr (2517) [B23] 4NCL Division 3 North Bolton, ENG (3.11), [Burke,Steven J]

Li,Henry (2247) - Bobras,Piotr (2517) [B23] 4NCL Division 3 North Bolton, ENG (3.11), [Burke,Steven J] Report 2 on Divisions 3 and 4 Weekend 2, 2017 by Steve Burke In Division 3Sa Wood Green sits proudly on the top of the table with a full eight points. But Wessex had another good weekend, taking second

More information

l Slav Defense - Smyslov System for Black! l

l Slav Defense - Smyslov System for Black! l Hogeye Billʼs Slav System for Black" Saturday, May 1, 2010" page 1 of 8 l Slav Defense - Smyslov System for Black! l 1 d4 d5 2 c4 c6" (with Smyslov s 5...na6)! 3! 4! 5! 6! 7! 8! 9! 10! 11! 12! 13! 14 1!

More information

Bonzo Benoni Chess Theory Table

Bonzo Benoni Chess Theory Table Bonzo Benoni Chess Theory Table 1 d4 c5 2 d5 (a) d6 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Eval Schmid Benoni Hempeater Variation 1 Nc3 g6 e4 Bg7 Bc3!? bc3 Nf6 Bb5 Bd7 Bd3 Bg4 Nbd7 = Three Pawn Attack Variation 2 e4

More information

HOLLAND CHESS ACADEMY Winter 2018

HOLLAND CHESS ACADEMY Winter 2018 HOLLAND CHESS ACADEMY Winter 2018 Scholastic Club Championship # Schremser s Shots # Calvin Okemos # Internal Tournament # Ludington Optimists Fifteen Puzzle Sets # Holland Chess Academy Tactics 2017 SCHOLASTIC

More information

SICILIAN DRAGON Qa5 REFUTED (Photo John Henderson)

SICILIAN DRAGON Qa5 REFUTED (Photo John Henderson) TWIC THEORY Tuesday 15 th February, 2005 SICILIAN DRAGON 10... Qa5 REFUTED (Photo John Henderson) Andrew Martin is an International Master, and National Coach. Currently professional coach and author.

More information

Study.1 IURI AKOBIA (GEORGIA) WCCI st prize, World Cup 2010

Study.1 IURI AKOBIA (GEORGIA) WCCI st prize, World Cup 2010 Study.1 1 st prize, World Cup 2010 Win 1.Rf8+ 1.Nd6? Rf2+ 2.Nxe4 Rxf1+ 3.Kb2 g2=; 1.Rf4? Rxc8+ 2.Rxe4 Rxb8+= 1...Kd7 2.Nb6+! The first interesting moment of the study. It is tempting to play - 2.Nd6? Bg6!

More information

Jones, Morabito, Gegg tackle the field at the MI Open

Jones, Morabito, Gegg tackle the field at the MI Open Chess Chatter Newsletter of the Port Huron Chess Club Editor: Lon Rutkofske September 2015 Vol.34 Number 8 The Port Huron Chess Club meets Thursdays, except holidays, from 6:30-10:00 PM, at Palmer Park

More information

Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century

Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century Mini-Lessons From Short Games Of 21st Century By IM Nikolay Minev The New Face of the Four Knights There is currently a strange new variation in the Four Knights Opening, with an early g3. As far as I

More information

XABCDEFGHY 8r+-tr-+k+( 7zp-+-+pzp-' 6-zp-+psn-zp& 5+-+qsN-+-% 4-+Pzp-wQ-+$ 3+-+-tR-+-# 2PzP-+-zPPzP" 1tR-+-+-mK-! xabcdefghy

XABCDEFGHY 8r+-tr-+k+( 7zp-+-+pzp-' 6-zp-+psn-zp& 5+-+qsN-+-% 4-+Pzp-wQ-+$ 3+-+-tR-+-# 2PzP-+-zPPzP 1tR-+-+-mK-! xabcdefghy 2018 Kansas Open Reserve games There were not as many game sheets turned in the Reserve section as Open section at the 2018 Kansas Open. The following are ones I could follow and thought were worthwhile.

More information

Mini-Lessons from Short Games of the 21st Century

Mini-Lessons from Short Games of the 21st Century Mini-Lessons from Short Games of the 21st Century By IM Nikolay Minev Blunders With Two Open Files in the Center A blunder is a mistake that immediately decides the game. Of course, blunders can happen

More information

Slav Defense. Flank Openings. versus. Games. Slav Defense - Anti-English (A55 Old Indian, Main line) The Slav Setup vs. Flank Openings page 1 of 8

Slav Defense. Flank Openings. versus. Games. Slav Defense - Anti-English (A55 Old Indian, Main line) The Slav Setup vs. Flank Openings page 1 of 8 The Slav Setup vs. Flank Openings page 1 of 8 Slav Defense versus Flank Openings Slav Defense - Anti-English 1 c4 c6 2 e4 2 d4 d5 is the Slav Defense. 2... e5 /tjnwlnjt\ /Oo+o+oOo\ / +o+ + +\ /+ + O +

More information

XIIIIIIIIY 8r+lwq-trk+0 7+-zpn+pzpp0 6p+-zp-vl-+0 5zPp+-zp tRNvLQtR-mK-0 xabcdefghy

XIIIIIIIIY 8r+lwq-trk+0 7+-zpn+pzpp0 6p+-zp-vl-+0 5zPp+-zp tRNvLQtR-mK-0 xabcdefghy This game is annotated in Shakhmaty v SSSR (. 6, 1974). It appears as an extract from the preparation of book published in Estonia, entitled '4 x 25', in which the authors Keres and Nei present 25 of the

More information

PROVISIONAL AWARD TOURNEY MAYAR SAKKVILAG -2016

PROVISIONAL AWARD TOURNEY MAYAR SAKKVILAG -2016 PROVISIONAL AWARD TOURNEY MAYAR SAKKVILAG -2016 A special thanks to the editors of the magazine, Magyar Sakkvilag, and in particular to Peter Gyarmati, Tournament Director, for having appointed as a judge

More information

The 4th Harvard Cup Human Versus Computer Chess Challenge. Danny Kopec (Department of Computer Science, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, CT, USA)

The 4th Harvard Cup Human Versus Computer Chess Challenge. Danny Kopec (Department of Computer Science, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, CT, USA) The 4th Harvard Cup Human Versus Computer Chess Challenge Danny Kopec (Department of Computer Science, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, CT, USA) The fourth edition in the series of Harvard Cup tournaments

More information

XIIIIIIIIY 8r+-wqrvlk+0 7+l+n+pzpp0 6-snpzp-+-+0

XIIIIIIIIY 8r+-wqrvlk+0 7+l+n+pzpp0 6-snpzp-+-+0 This game is annotated by Leonid Shamkovich in the Soviet tournament book, Mezhzonaln'yi Turnir - Leningrad 1973 (Fizkultura i Sport, Moscow 1974). The translation from the original Russian is by Douglas

More information

The Modernized Benko. Milos Perunovic

The Modernized Benko. Milos Perunovic The Modernized Benko Milos Perunovic First edition 2018 by Thinkers Publishing Copyright 2018 Milos Perunovic All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system

More information

THE MARTIAN SYSTEM IN CHESS

THE MARTIAN SYSTEM IN CHESS THE MARTIAN SYSTEM IN CHESS This system is for beginners in chess, and if it is applied diligently in the games they play, they will soon be very much improved, and theirs will be the joy of beating those

More information

XIIIIIIIIY 8-+-trk+-tr0 7+lwqpvlpzpp0 6p+n+p PzP R+RmK-0 xabcdefghy

XIIIIIIIIY 8-+-trk+-tr0 7+lwqpvlpzpp0 6p+n+p PzP R+RmK-0 xabcdefghy This game is annotated by Tal in the Soviet tournament book, Mezhzonaln'yi Turnir - Leningrad 1973 (Fizkultura i Sport, Moscow 1974). The translation from the original Russian is by Douglas Griffin. Tal

More information

The Modernized Nimzo Queen s Gambit Declined Systems

The Modernized Nimzo Queen s Gambit Declined Systems The Modernized Nimzo Queen s Gambit Declined Systems First edition 2018 by Thinkers Publishing Copyright 2018 Milos Pavlovic All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in

More information

Componist Study Tourney

Componist Study Tourney Componist 2012-3 Study Tourney Award by John Nunn 27 studies competed in this tourney, but two were eliminated as they had been submitted as originals to other publications. Unfortunately, the standard

More information

All games have an opening. Most games have a middle game. Some games have an ending.

All games have an opening. Most games have a middle game. Some games have an ending. Chess Openings INTRODUCTION A game of chess has three parts. 1. The OPENING: the start of the game when you decide where to put your pieces 2. The MIDDLE GAME: what happens once you ve got your pieces

More information

2PzP-+LzPPzP0 1tR-+Q+RmK-0 xabcdefghy

2PzP-+LzPPzP0 1tR-+Q+RmK-0 xabcdefghy This game is annotated by David Bronstein in a report on the 9 th Asztalos Memorial tournament in Shakhmaty v SSSR (. 10, 1966). The translation from the original Russian is by Douglas Griffin. Kavalek

More information

4NCL Telford - Weekend 2 (by Steve Burke)

4NCL Telford - Weekend 2 (by Steve Burke) 4NCL Telford - Weekend 2 (by Steve Burke) After the Winter Break from 4NCL action we returned to action - just in time for winter to actually arrive. This untimely freezing weather and Saturday night snowfall

More information

Mikhail Tal Blitz Games (g/5)

Mikhail Tal Blitz Games (g/5) Mikhail Tal Blitz Games (g/5) Herceg Novi 1970 (double round robin) The strongest blitz tournament ever played! 1. Fischer 19.0 2-3 Tal, Korchnoi 14.5 4-5 Bronstein, Petrosian 13.5 6. Hort 12.0 7. Matulovic

More information

rmblkans opo0zpop 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Zpo0Z0 0O0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0Z0O0 PZPOPOBO SNAQJ0MR Dada Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History Statistics 0.1.

rmblkans opo0zpop 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Zpo0Z0 0O0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0Z0O0 PZPOPOBO SNAQJ0MR Dada Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History Statistics 0.1. Database: 31-XII-2010 (4,399,153 games) Report: 1.g3 e5 2.Bg2 d5 3.b4 (23 games) ECO: A00v [Benko Opening] Generated by Scid 4.2.2, 2011.02.15 Dada Gambit rmblkans opo0zpop 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Zpo0Z0 0O0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0Z0O0

More information

THE ATTACK AGAINST THE KING WITH CASTLES ON THE SAME SIDE (I)

THE ATTACK AGAINST THE KING WITH CASTLES ON THE SAME SIDE (I) THE ATTACK AGAINST THE KING WITH CASTLES ON THE SAME SIDE (I) In the case where both players have castled on the same wing, realizing the attack against the kings is more difficult. To start an attack,

More information

14 th World Computer-Chess Championship 11 th Computer Olympiad Turin, Italy May 25, 2006

14 th World Computer-Chess Championship 11 th Computer Olympiad Turin, Italy May 25, 2006 4 th World Computer-Chess Championship th Computer Olympiad Turin, Italy May 25, 26 Bulletin On May 25, 5. hours the players meeting of the 4 th WCCC in the Oval in Turin started. After a welcome to world

More information

PROVISIONAL AWARD MEMORIAL TOURNEY HORACIO MUSANTE 100 SECTION #N

PROVISIONAL AWARD MEMORIAL TOURNEY HORACIO MUSANTE 100 SECTION #N PROVISIONAL AWARD MEMORIAL TOURNEY HORACIO MUSANTE 100 SECTION #N On behalf of the Union Argentina de Problemistas de Ajedrez (UAPA) I thank all participants of this tournament. Special thanks to Mario

More information

Flexible system of defensive play for Black 1 b6

Flexible system of defensive play for Black 1 b6 Flexible system of defensive play for Black 1 b6 Marcin Maciaga: http://d-artagnan.webpark.pl; d-artagnan@wp.pl A few years ago during II League Polish Team Championship, Spala 2001, on a stand selling

More information

Championship Round 7. Welcome to the 2011 Queens Chess Club Championship!!

Championship Round 7. Welcome to the 2011 Queens Chess Club Championship!! Queens Chess Club Championship Round 7 Welcome to the 2011 Queens Chess Club Championship!! The time control is g ame in 2 hours (120 minutes). If you are using an analog clock, please set it for 4:00

More information

First Thomas, then Petty, then Webb Oh my!!! One never knows who might show up at the PHCC. lately. After a 20 year absence Dangerous Dan

First Thomas, then Petty, then Webb Oh my!!! One never knows who might show up at the PHCC. lately. After a 20 year absence Dangerous Dan Chess Chatter Newsletter of the Port Huron Chess Club Editor: Lon Rutkofske March 2015 Vol.34 Number 3 The Port Huron Chess Club meets Thursdays, except holidays, from 6:30-10:00 PM, at Palmer Park Recreation

More information

9...Qc7?! 10.Rc Bg6. Or...Bg4. 13.Nb Qb8. Forced. 16.Qd2

9...Qc7?! 10.Rc Bg6. Or...Bg4. 13.Nb Qb8. Forced. 16.Qd2 More popular are 7...h6 and 7...Be7. 8.d3 0 0 9.Nbd2 ECO's line 9...Qc7?! The Check Is in the Mail March 2009 WALTER BROWER ANNOTATES! This was new to me; ECO shows 9...e5 10. cxd5 cxd5 11. Rc1 Qe7 = with

More information

rzblkzns opopzpop 0ZnZ0Z0Z Z0a0O0Z0 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0ZNZ0 POPZPOPO SNAQJBZR Felbecker Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History 0.1.

rzblkzns opopzpop 0ZnZ0Z0Z Z0a0O0Z0 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0Z0ZNZ0 POPZPOPO SNAQJBZR Felbecker Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History 0.1. Felbecker Gambit Database: 31-XII-2010 (4,399,153 games) Report: 1.d4 e5 2.dxe5 Nc6 3.Nf3 Bc5 (30 games) ECO: A40i [Englund Gambit: 2.dxe5 Nc6 3.Nf3] Generated by Scid 4.2.2, 2011.02.15 rzblkzns opopzpop

More information

New Weapons in the King s Indian by Milos Pavlovic

New Weapons in the King s Indian by Milos Pavlovic New Weapons in the King s Indian by Milos Pavlovic Milos Pavlovic investigated one of the most opening, the King s Indian. He focused on little explored and dynamic ways to battle the basic White systems.

More information

The Vera Menchik Club and Beyond

The Vera Menchik Club and Beyond The Vera Menchik Club and Beyond by IM Nikolay Minev Vera Menchik (1906-1944) was the first Women s World Champion, reigning from 1927 to 1944, when she, her mother and sister were killed during an air

More information

Cor van Wijgerden Learning chess Manual for independent learners Step 6

Cor van Wijgerden Learning chess Manual for independent learners Step 6 Cor van Wijgerden Learning chess Manual for independent learners Step 6 Contents Preface... 4 Step 6... 5 1: King in the middle... 9 2: The passed pawn... 23 3: Strategy... 36 4: Mobility... 53 5: Draws...

More information

rmblkans opo0zpop 0Z0ZpZ0Z Z0ZpZ0Z0 0Z0ZPO0Z Z0Z0ZNZ0 POPO0ZPO SNAQJBZR La Bourdonnais Gambit (2) 0.1 Statistics and History 0.1.

rmblkans opo0zpop 0Z0ZpZ0Z Z0ZpZ0Z0 0Z0ZPO0Z Z0Z0ZNZ0 POPO0ZPO SNAQJBZR La Bourdonnais Gambit (2) 0.1 Statistics and History 0.1. Database: 3-XII-200 (4,399,53 games) Report:.e4 e6 2.f4 d5 3.Nf3 (2 games) ECO: C00c [French: La Bourdonnais Variation] Generated by Scid 4.2.2, 20.02.5 La Bourdonnais Gambit (2) rmblkans opo0zpop 0Z0ZpZ0Z

More information

The Instructor Mark Dvoretsky

The Instructor Mark Dvoretsky Training with Grandmasters Every missed opportunity to play better - even in a drawn game, or a difficult game to win - is your loss. That is why it is necessary for you to return again and again to study

More information

VIRGINIA CHESS #3. Newsletter The bimonthly publication of the Virginia Chess Federation. Francisco José de Souto Leite aka Derbyblue

VIRGINIA CHESS #3. Newsletter The bimonthly publication of the Virginia Chess Federation. Francisco José de Souto Leite aka Derbyblue VIRGINIA CHESS Newsletter The bimonthly publication of the Virginia Chess Federation 2013 - #3 Francisco José de Souto Leite aka Derbyblue http://karmaello.com/culture/art/pulp-watercolor-paintings-derbyblue-art-gallery.html#_

More information

MR Who taught you the game initially?

MR Who taught you the game initially? TheChessPlace Staff Writer Mark C. Ryan Oct 2, 2008 Washington State has some of the best Scholastic Players in the nation. In support of these players there are top quality coaches and Organizations that

More information

The Instructor Mark Dvoretsky

The Instructor Mark Dvoretsky The Instructor Mark Dvoretsky Simagin's Exchange Sacrifices Today, the positional exchange sacrifice Rxc3! in the Sicilian Defense has become a standard tactic that has probably been employed in thousands

More information

RUDOLF SPIELMANN: Fifty Great Short Games

RUDOLF SPIELMANN: Fifty Great Short Games RUDOLF SPIELMANN: Fifty Great Short Games International Master Nikolay Minev The Chess Library Seattle, Washington 1 Copyright 2008 by The Chess Library All rights reserved. No part of this book may be

More information

The Blondie25 Chess Program Competes Against Fritz 8.0 and a Human Chess Master

The Blondie25 Chess Program Competes Against Fritz 8.0 and a Human Chess Master The Blondie25 Chess Program Competes Against Fritz 8.0 and a Human Chess Master David B. Fogel Timothy J. Hays Sarah L. Hahn James Quon Natural Selection, Inc. 3333 N. Torrey Pines Ct., Suite 200 La Jolla,

More information

The Reshevsky Nimzo p. 1 /

The Reshevsky Nimzo p. 1 / The Reshevsky Nimzo p. 1 / 15 2011.03.19 http://katar.weebly.com/ GAME 1 Botvinnik, Mikhail -- Taimanov, Mark E Moskou ch-urs playoff (1) Moskou ch-urs plof 1952 1-0 E40 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3

More information

rzblkans opopz0op 0ZnZ0Z0Z Z0Z0oPZ0 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0ZPZNZ0 POPZ0OPO SNAQJBZR Clam Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History Statistics 0.1.

rzblkans opopz0op 0ZnZ0Z0Z Z0Z0oPZ0 0Z0Z0Z0Z Z0ZPZNZ0 POPZ0OPO SNAQJBZR Clam Gambit 0.1 Statistics and History Statistics 0.1. Clam Gambit Database: 3-XII-200 (4,399,53 games) Report:.e4 e5 2.Nf3 f5 3.d3 Nc6 4.exf5 (20 games) ECO: C40k [Latvian Gambit: 3.d3] Generated by Scid 4.2.2, 20.02.5 rzblkans opopz0op 0ZnZ0Z0Z Z0Z0oPZ0

More information

HALLOWEEN GAMBIT. 120 Games

HALLOWEEN GAMBIT. 120 Games HALLOWEEN GAMBIT 120 Games R. Escalante www.thenewchessplayer.com 1 INTRODUCTION The Halloween Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Nxe5), while not often played in a traditional tournament, is played

More information

Blunder Buster Volume 1, Issue 1

Blunder Buster Volume 1, Issue 1 Blunder Buster Volume 1, Issue 1 By Richard Reid What s the purpose of this series? The purpose of this series is to acquaint you with the common types of blunders that occur in the game of chess, and

More information

White Wins (20 Games)

White Wins (20 Games) C&O Family Chess Center www.chesscenter.net Openings for Study Introduction to The Sicilian Defense; ECO B20-B99 Games that start with 1.e4 make up almost 50% of all tournament games (1.d4 accounts for

More information

ROUND 1 HIGHLIGHTS BY WGM TATEV ABRAHAMYAN

ROUND 1 HIGHLIGHTS BY WGM TATEV ABRAHAMYAN Inside this Issue Aronian - Nepomniachtchi Vachier-Lagrave - So Karjakin - Svidler Caruana - Carlsen Anand - Nakamura Current Standings Round 2 Pairings Schedule of Events 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 THURSDAY, AUGUST

More information

ä#'çè#'å ëêá'#êë' '#ê#'ã'# #ÊËê#à#ê Ê#'Ëê#'ã #'Ã'Ë'ËÊ 'Á'ÃÀË'# Å'#ÆÉ'#Ä

ä#'çè#'å ëêá'#êë' '#ê#'ã'# #ÊËê#à#ê Ê#'Ëê#'ã #'Ã'Ë'ËÊ 'Á'ÃÀË'# Å'#ÆÉ'#Ä Displayed on some of the antique chessboards on view in this exhibition are positions from famous games selected by Grandmaster Alejandro Ramirez. As with many of the sets included in Encore!, the games

More information

The Check Is in the Mail October 2007

The Check Is in the Mail October 2007 The Check Is in the Mail October 2007 THE YOUNGEST CC MASTER? Anthony learned chess from his father. In June of 2004 he began playing chess at the Indian River County chess club. Humberto Cruz, a Florida

More information

GAME OF THE MONTH. SICILIAN DEFENSE (B80) White: Victor Palciauskas (2577) Black: Roman Chytilek (2649) Simon Webb Memorial 2007

GAME OF THE MONTH. SICILIAN DEFENSE (B80) White: Victor Palciauskas (2577) Black: Roman Chytilek (2649) Simon Webb Memorial 2007 GAME OF THE MONTH SICILIAN DEFENSE (B80) White: Victor Palciauskas (2577) Black: Roman Chytilek (2649) Simon Webb Memorial 2007 The Check Is in the Mail December 2009 SIMON WEBB MEMORIAL 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3

More information

Blunder Buster Volume 1, Issue 2

Blunder Buster Volume 1, Issue 2 Blunder Buster Volume 1, Issue 2 By Richard Reid Last issue, we provided an overview of blunders and discussed the Simple Type-1 Blunder, when you or your opponent puts a piece on a square where it can

More information

West Virginia Chess Bulletin

West Virginia Chess Bulletin West Virginia Chess Bulletin Vol. 2018-01 Sam Timmons and John Roush win the 79 th WV State Championship March 2018 In this issue: 79 th WV State Championship Annual Business Meeting Minutes 4 th WV Senior

More information

Institute of Chess. Revision Guide to LEVEL 5. The contents were written and arranged by. Andrew Bigg with advice from GM Chris Ward.

Institute of Chess. Revision Guide to LEVEL 5. The contents were written and arranged by. Andrew Bigg with advice from GM Chris Ward. Institute of Chess Revision Guide to LEVEL 5 The contents were written and arranged by Andrew Bigg with advice from GM Chris Ward. This revision guide is dedicated to the memory of IM Bob Wade OBE (1921

More information

The Check Is in the Mail

The Check Is in the Mail The Check Is in the Mail August 2006 I will be out of the office August 14-18, teaching a chess camp in Rochester, New York. I will answer all the emails after I get back. CHECKS AND BALANCES (EDITORIAL)

More information

ROUND 5 HIGHLIGHTS BY WGM TATEV ABRAHAMYAN

ROUND 5 HIGHLIGHTS BY WGM TATEV ABRAHAMYAN Inside this Issue Anand - Caruana So - Carlsen 3 Karjakin - Nepomniachtchi 4 Vachier-Lagrave - Aronian 5 Nakamura - Svidler 6 Current Standings 7 Round 6 Pairings 7 Schedule of Events 8 MONDAY, AUGUST

More information

BCCF BULLETIN #97

BCCF  BULLETIN #97 BCCF E-MAIL BULLETIN #97 Your editor welcomes any and all submissions for this Bulletin - news of upcoming events, tournament reports, and anything else that might be of interest to the BC chess community.

More information

xabcdefghy 5.Nd5!? This is the Belagrade Gambit. Or, White could play the solid: Best for Black is 5 Bb4! a) 5... Bc5?! 6.

xabcdefghy 5.Nd5!? This is the Belagrade Gambit. Or, White could play the solid: Best for Black is 5 Bb4! a) 5... Bc5?! 6. The Belgrade Gambit stems from the Four Knights Opening, 3.Nc3 Nf6 5.Nd5!? It was introduced in the first Belgrade Championship (1945). It looks strange; an opening gambit should result in a lead in development,

More information

The King Hunt - Mato Jelic

The King Hunt - Mato Jelic The King Hunt - Mato Jelic For all the talk of strategy, checkmate ends the game. And hunting the enemy king is the first and final love for many chess players, the ultimate essence of the game. The high

More information

Learn and Master Progressive Chess

Learn and Master Progressive Chess Learn and Master Progressive Chess Matej Guid The CIP record was created by the National and University Library Ljubljana. COBISS.SI-ID=293222144 ISBN 978-961-6209-96-0 (pdf) The electronic edition of

More information